-67%

Tasting the Sky: A Palestinian Childhood

Original price was: $14.99.Current price is: $4.99.

Tasting the Sky: A Palestinian Childhood

Availability: 1 in stock SKU: 236305 Category:

Additional Information

Weight:2 lbs
Source:Imported
Language(s):English
Book/Item Condition:New
Shipping Weight:2
Note(s):New, Never Read (Few Books May Show Slight or Expected signs of shelf fatigue due to the book's age). Besides Antiquarian Books and/Rare Second Hard (specified), The Overall Quality of our Books are Good+, Very Good and Evidently New!

Description

Tasting the Sky: A Palestinian Childhood Paperback
by Ibtisam Barakat (Author)
“When a war ends it does not go away,” my mother says.”It hides inside us . . . Just forget!”
But I do not want to do what Mother says . . . I want to remember.

In this groundbreaking memoir set in Ramallah during the aftermath of the 1967 Six-Day War, Ibtisam Barakat captures what it is like to be a child whose world is shattered by war. With candor and courage, she stitches together memories of her childhood: fear and confusion as bombs explode near her home and she is separated from her family; the harshness of life in the Middle East as a Palestinian refugee; her unexpected joy when she discovers Alef, the first letter of the Arabic alphabet. This is the beginning of her passionate connection to words, and as language becomes her refuge, allowing her to piece together the fragments of her world, it becomes her true home.

Transcending the particulars of politics, Tasting the Sky: A Palestinian Childhood is an illuminating and timely book that provides a telling glimpse into a part of the Middle East that has become an increasingly important part of the puzzle of world peace.

Winner of the Arab American National Museum Book Award for Children’s/YA Literature

“In vivid, beautiful prose, Ibtisam Barakat transports readers into a place few Westerners have ever seen―the interior life of a young girl and her family in the occupied West Bank. This book, appropriate for readers young and old, holds literature’s great power: the power to humanize the ‘other,’ and to therefore change the way we understand our world.” ―Sandy Tolan, author of The Lemon Tree: An Arab, a Jew, and the Heart of the Middle East